Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Brazil and the US—A Comparison of Consuming Industries

Two recent cases brought to mind the CITAC comparison chart, of trade remedy practices in various countries.  If you have seen the chart, you know that the US ranks last among major trading nations, along with China, in the friendliness of trade remedy practices to downstream industries and consumers.  This is unfortunate, because it makes the US less competitive with other countries in manufacturing and retailing.

One of the important issues is the ability to get suspension of antidumping or countervailing duties (or other remedies such as safeguards) in conditions of “short supply”.  When raw materials are scarce, and the domestic industry cannot supply domestic customers, sound policy should require antidumping and countervailing duties to be reduced or suspended.

In Brazil, this situation happened very recently.  The sole significant producer of toluene diisocyanate (TIS) in Brazil suspended production.  The Brazilian authorities acted quickly, even though the antidumping duties on the product had been put in place only last November.  When it became apparent that there would be a shortage of this important chemical (used to make polyurethane, glues, varnishes and other products used in the furniture, mattress and automotive industries), Brazil suspended antidumping duties on TSI for one year.  The duties were significant, and applied to imports from the US and Argentina [confirm].

Compare this to a recent case in the U.S. Court of International Trade.  The sole remaining producer of a extruded rubber thread, product important to the textile industry, went into bankruptcy.  Commerce initiated a “changed circumstances” review based on a filing by a Malaysian exporter and supported by the US producer.  Actual users of the product lack standing under US law to request such a review.  Commerce revoked the order prospectively, but later the importer/exporter and the bankrupt domestic producer asked for the revocation to be back-dated to 1995, to allow for refund of duties pursuant to a settlement agreement.  Commerce refused.  The parties appealed to the courts, which ruled on March 21 that Commerce should reconsider the request and remanded the case.

The differences in how Brazil and the US handled these situations are instructive.  In both cases, the domestic petitioner was not able to serve domestic demand.  Brazil acted quickly and decisively, but not permanently, to open the market for downstream purchasers for an industrial chemical product.  The U.S. authorities started a process only when both sides approached Commerce jointly and the petitioner asserted “no interest” in continued antidumping duties.  Even then, when the parties reached a settlement that allowed for the recovery of import duties, Commerce balked.

The US needs an effective to allow downstream users access to important sources of raw materials and finished goods that do not have adequate supplier in our market.  Antidumping and countervailing duties make no sense if there is not adequate domestic supply.  Petitioners, who are more interested in protection than in the national economic interest, have opposed such efforts at reform in the past.  But the government should consider the interests of all in an economy that works, even while it addresses unfair trade. 

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